Want this question answered?
NO, the main rotor does the lifting and the small rear propeller is used to stop it spinning around and help with steering it.
It would crash, but that would only happen if the transmission locked up. If the engine stops, the rotors would continue to spin and the pilot would autorotate the craft to the ground.
Trim it by turning the trim knob in the opposite direction that it is spinning
if that happens, then it would stop working.
Stop Spinning was created in 1985.
A very larg helicopter may be able to take off with an added 50,000 lbs. of weight. A good sized modern train is going to be significantly larger than this. The helicopter's blades would likely give out as they are suddenly reversed if you just "slammed on the brakes" so to speak. If you had the helicopter going at the same speed as the train, and slowled the helicopter down as much as possible, the train would eventually stop if the locomotives were not powering the wheels (it would stop without the helicopter, too, and would be infinitely safer for the helicopter pilot). If the locomotive is powering the wheels, the helicopter's not going to do a whole lot.
no
A silkworm will stop spinning ts cocoon once it has wrapped itself completely in the cocoon.
The Earth won't, actually can't stop spinning in a human timescale.
yes
Probably not.
Yes, real-life beyblades are toys that are designed to mimic the spinning battles seen in the anime series. Players launch the beyblades into an arena and try to knock their opponent's beyblade out or make it stop spinning first. It's a popular toy among children and collectors.